Cognition
Social Psychology
Clinical Psychology
Forensic Psychology
Surprise!!
100
Things that can affect memory.

What is Anxiety, Depression, Fatigue, Stress, Medication, and substance use.

100

Define Conformity

Changing behavior due to the influence of a group

100
ICD stands for..

International Classification of Diseases, is a classification system created by the World Health Organization (WHO- an intergovernmental organization) used for diagnosis, research, reimbursement, statistical tracking, and mortality data for all mental and physical diseases

100

Define Forensic Psychology

The study of psychological principles in legal contexts

100

What does DSM-5 stand for?

Diagnostic & Statistic Manual Edition 5

200

Capacity of Short-Term memory.

7 +/- items

200

Bystander effect most likely will occur..

In a large crowd

200

Types of mood disorders we learned about

Bipolar disorder & Depressive disorder

200

What does it mean to plea diminished capacity.

Does not have the capacity to commit the larger crime, merely pleading to a lesser crime. A diminished capacity defense can be used to negate the element of intent to commit a crime

200

Major Depressive Disorder is characterized by: 

Extreme increase or decreases in appetite & extreme increase or decrease in sleep, Extreme increase or decreases in appetite & extreme increase or decrease in sleep

300

The three most agreed upon parts of memory?

What is Rehearsal, Storage, Retrieval.

300

Social Schemas are


Mental frameworks for understanding others

300

Psychosis is...

  • an abnormal mental state involving significant problems with reality testing characterized by serious impairments or disruptions in the most fundamental higher brain functions—perception, cognition and cognitive processing, and emotions or affect—as manifested in behavioral phenomena, such as delusions, hallucinations, and significantly disorganized speech”. APA Dictionary of Psychology(2018, para. 1),


    • Psychotic episode: a state of altered reality in which a person experiences significant disturbances in their thoughts, perceptions, and behavior

300

Forensic psychologists often assist in:


Jury selection and criminal profiling

300

Prejudice-

Stereotype-

Discrimination-

Belief

Thought

Action

400

Areas of the brain associated with explicit & implicit memory.

Explicit: Hippocampus

 Implicit: Cerebellum

400

Fundamental Attribution error

the tendency for people to overemphasize personality-based explanations for behaviors observed in others while under-emphasizing situational explanations

400

What are two Biomedical explanations of Aggression and Antisocial Behavior

Genetics & Hormone inbalance

400

This term describes the process of creating a psychological profile to help identify a suspect based on the behavior shown at a crime scene.(They did it in criminal minds)

Criminal profiling

400

Name 3 reliable academic sources

DSM-5

Peer-reviewed journals

Educational websites

National Institute of Health

500

The Multi-Store Memory model definition.

Multi-Store Memory Model (MSM) – Atkinson and Shiffrin (1968)

What is The Multi-Store Memory Model is a psychological theory that explains how memory works in terms of three distinct stores:

  1. Sensory Memory (SM)

  2. Short-Term Memory (STM)

  3. Long-Term Memory (LTM)

It suggests that memory is a linear process, moving from sensory memory to short term memory by attention and then short term memory to long term memory through transfer. Sensory memory is unlimited and duration is a few seconds, Short term memory is 7+/- lasting for a minute or so. Long term memory is unlimited and can last a lifetime. 

500

Define ABC's of Atttitudes

  • A for affective (emotional) component,

  • B for behavioral (action) component, 

  • C for cognitive (belief) component.

500

Name a Cluster C personality disorder

Avoidant, Dependent, Obsessive-Compulsive

500

This legal term refers to when a person is found not responsible for a crime because they were unable to understand what they were due to an inability to distinguish from right and wrong.

Insanity Defense

500

Define the theory of Moral Development

The Theory of Moral Development is a psychological theory created by Lawrence Kohlberg. It explains how people learn to decide what is right and wrong as they grow up. Kohlberg believed that moral thinking develops in stages, and he grouped six stages into three main levels:

  1. Pre-conventional level (usually in young children): People make decisions based on avoiding punishment or getting rewards.

  2. Conventional level (common in teens and adults): People make decisions based on following rules and gaining approval from others.

  3. Post-conventional level (less common): People follow their own moral principles, even if they go against laws or rules.

Kohlberg thought that everyone goes through these stages in the same order, but not everyone reaches the highest level.